Slides
Nick Evans, Dineke Schokkin, and I presented our work in reconstructing the phoneme inventory of proto-Pahoturi River. This presentation focused on the reconstruction of the liquids. Although there are at most three liquids in each PR language, there are five distinct correspondence sets across the family.
Slides
On May 19th, I gave a talk titled “Verbal Reduplication in Ende” at the 3rd annual Northwest Phonetics and Phonology Conference. The data presented in this talk were collected in 2015 and 2016 and the proposed analysis for the three reduplication patterns is part of my dissertation proposal. I got some great feedback and stayed with my friend Oksana, whom I met in 2011 at the LSA Institute in Boulder. I’ve attached the slides below.
I had the wonderful opportunity to share some data and thoughts on nominal and verbal reduplication in Ende with the Stanford Phonology Interest group before presenting my talk at NoW Phon. I got some great feedback from my dissertation committee and other members of the reading group.
As I wrap up my qualifying paper on “caseless” subjects and objects in Turkish, I was delighted to present my progress at the Qualifying Paper Festival. After my talk, I received a lot of feedback on my research that greatly improved my qualifying paper.
I was very excited to be able to present my work on Sonority-Driven Stress in Chuvash at the Annual Meeting of Phonology in Vancouver! I saw some great talks; I particularly enjoyed Ellen Kaisse's plenary talk on postlexical processes and Arto Anttila's talk on meter across genres. I was also looking forward to meeting Shu-Hao Shih, who presented a poster titled "Sonority-driven stress does not exist." Now there's a poster title! It was fun discussing sonority in Gujarati with Shu-Hao, especially as it made my talk the next day a bit more interactive for the audience. All in all, a wonderful experience! AbstractHandoutJulia Fine and I presented our work on KinQuest at the 4th International Conference on Language Documentation and Conservation. KinQuest is a new tool for eliciting and comparing kinship terminologies. It's a pilot survey that elicits exhaustive kinship data with the ability to adapt to many different kinds of kinship systems. This is the first step of a much larger project to develop an expansive cross-linguistic survey. Slides below.
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AuthorKate Lynn Lindsey Archives
March 2022
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